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wow, thanks for featuring Jo, I did not know about this, if ever I get there someday, I will keep this in mind if I get a chance to visit the Academy of Science. I love the corals. And your video is great, so nice to see those fishes swimming around. I really wish I am under water right now :)

This kind of thing is very relaxing but fun to watch. Our zoo has a place where you can walk under the water to view fish like this. I was only there one time, but I've always wanted to go back, especially now after reading your post.

Thanks for leaving me the note, Joanne. I didn't know you stopped writing on Today.com--although I am not surprised. All of my favorites took the same route. I am only a semi-author there right now (writing about twice a month, it seems). Thanks for adding my button here. I'll let you know if I move the site.

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Click the above widget for more Camera Critters fun.

You wake up in the middle of the night. It is 3:00 am and you cannot get back to sleep. Ideas, street scenes and dreams swirl around in your head activating your creative membranes with words that you know you will forget by dawn. What do you do? Always keep a pen and paper by your bed and jot down those words and ideas. No need to form those words. Those words will become meaningful as you meld them together with your ideas during daylight hours.

The craft of writing poetry does not adhere to the 9 to 5 seven day week venue. Poetry comes to you when you are least expecting it and when you are open to its visit. If you treat poetry as a job it will inevitably fill your days with writer’s block. Poetry is born of the heart and soul and not the brain. The heart holds the poem and the brain forms the style. The following quote by poet Lucille Clifton most adequately describes poetry in its most raw form.